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-PAGE FOIiH
The OREGON STATESMAN, SalesIOregonSmiday Itodaj October 21, 1334
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GIRL IN
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From First Statesman, March 28, 1851
: THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO.
Cbakles A. Sfkacus Editor-Manager
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V.
GOOD-DEEDS
"TUe moral men mag have in mind;
Ye kearereh take it of worth, old and gonng$
And foreake pride, for he decexvetk you in the end,
And remember Beauty, Five-wits, Strength and Discretion,
They all at hut do Everyman foreake,
Save hi Good-Deeds, there doth ho take."
- - - Everyman.
v .
Terrorists-or Refugees?
: 7 A S a sequence to the discovery that the assassination of
JljL King Alexander of Jugoslavia was committed by a
member of a terrorist band
oslavia, Rumania and Czecho -
test against Hungary's alleged offense harboring the ass
assins. The Croat terrorists are alleged to have plotted
-inurders at a farm at Janka Puszta just over the border
. from Jugoslavia, and to have
Relations between Hungary
strained for a long time; and
protection or encouragement
tended to tbe band.
This introduces the fine point of whether, the band were
composed of "terrorists", with a wholesale scheme for as
sassination, or whether they
. nonaries plotting for the "redemption" of their oppressed
people. In other words were they terrorists or refugees?
t For centuries political refugees have found shelter cfnl
xpreign soil, usually this extended merely to safe harbor;
and did not indicate any governmental sympathy with their
aspirations or support to their cause.. Switzerland and Eng
land were places of refuge for revolutionaries from Germany
and Italy and Russia. America was long the asylum for
those for whom prison cells were waiting in their home
. lands, on account of their political activity. Serbia itself
prior to the -world war was. a hotbed of plotting against the
Austro-Hungarian monarchy.
One of the misfortunes of the war has been the closing
, of ports of refuge to aliens driven from their own countries
by political oppression. Emma Goldman, anarchist deported
from this'country back to Russia, writing on the "tragedy
of political exiles" in The Nation, says:
? 'The war for democracy and the advent of left and right
dictatorships destroyed whatever freedom of movement polit-
, . . leal refugees had formerly enjoyed. Tens of thousands of men,
:s women and children have been turned Into modern Ahasuer-
,, uses, forced to roam the earth, admitted nowhere, if they are
f fortunate -enough to find asylum it is nearly always-for a short
. 5 period only; they are always exposedUlo annoyance and chican-
r ery, and their lives are made a veritable helL"
Oddly enough, Miss Goldman says "the most unpardon
. able offender is the so-called Union of Socialist Soviet Repub
lics". There Stalin and the GPU have been ruthless in con
demning to exile or to prison or . to Siberia dissident indi
viduals. The harsh measures against political rebels is a re-
;: suit of the genera insecurity following the war and post-
jwar overturns. No government feels secure; and to protect
itself it exiles or. imprisons those whose revolutionary ten
dencies are feared."
There ought to be some distinction between terrorists
and political refugees. Those whose ruling motives are whole
sale assassinations and nihilism should be given no encour
agement in any country. They should be restrained if too
provocative, or at li&st kept in close surveillance. But the
fright of fesylunr tCL conscientious political revolutionaries
.; should not be denied. Mazzini, the evangel of Italian liberty,
"found shelter in England, as have many others. The United
.States has been a frequent port of refuge for political ref
ugees from .Cuba and other Latin American states. This
country has not endorsed or supported them, merely given
them asylum. Even Trotsky worked for z time in New York
.city.
. That Jugoslavia is modifying the rigid policy of Alex
. ander is indicated in the announcement of release of polit
ical prisoners there, one of them a former premier of the
kingdom; and the extension of amnesty to Croats who have
- been rebellions.' Such a policy is more enlightened than pro
voking a quarrel with Hungary, although Hungary may not
be innocent. of wrong-doing in-harboring the Croat as
sassins. -
; . An Unowned Man"
THE way the opposition newspapers are jumping on Joe
Dunne: and trying to dig up dirt against him must be
pretty good proof that he is a leading candidate for the office
' of governor. If he were a winded horse in the race the papers
would givt him no attention. Instead he has become the
.target. Sen. Dunne is a. familiar figure over the state; his
record in the legislature is open. He has been an active mem
.per of the senate -and has been Identified with much of the
most important legislation to be enacted in recent years.'
' .1 Instead of accepting the testimony presented in the heat
the present political campaign (although it really hasn't
got very hot yet) it might be better to see what was spoken
of Joe Dunne before he aspired to be governor.
rr SlJ?3,1 session ne butter grading laws were past
We didn t think they would do much good, but the Portland
-Journal sent Marshall Dana here to lobby for them. With the
help of Sen. Dunne the bills .were passed; and the Portland
. Journal commented on March 3 : ?-
"The Journal is glad that this 'farm friendly legislature
; has given to the state the dairy laws that will help bring Into
.. Oregon millions of dollars from world markets. . . . The Joarnal
r: remembers the untiring leadership of Senator Joe EL Dunne the
- tine work of Represent tire Dorothy KcCnllough Lee and' the
courageous position taken by the agriculture committee of the
. senate and the food sad dairy prodocU committee o th$ kouse."
. Again the Portland Journal endorsed Joe Dunne for a
position on the Portland Port commission,' and said of him
- on Nov. 7, 1932: f
Tt was not by his own motion that Joseph Dunne became
a candidate for membership on the Portland Pert commission.
. Recognising his fitness, his aggressiveness In public matter
aad his progressive ideas, hit friends during his absence from
. Portland and without his knowledge or consent, placed on
i the reform Port of Portland ticket. ...
Tt was an excellent selection. Be Is an nnowned man. Bo
. always has the courage of his convictions. In public affairs he
: has no secrets ho takes the public Into his confidence.
"Aloes; with Bert Han ey and Jack LuJhn, Senator Dunne
would be new blood and new and modern understanding on the
- port commission. . , "
"An unowned TJMnV- that wan tYim Torf Tan1 "Trnrnr
tribut9:te$ars,aJ7hil9jhe. JournaLis now smjrrtingj
- rea. jrtui we cave xxot seen mat is naa in any way mod
ified this expression of opinion. As Dunne was "an excellent
No Fear . Shall Awe''
the Little Entente powers. Jusr-
Slovakia are preparing a pro
practiced target-shooting there.
and Jugoslavia have been
the resentment is felt over the
which Hungary may have ex
were merely Croatian revolu-
aW i4
'!7' :
r 1. .i
Being Behind the
Discredit; Maybe They're Wrong
By D. H. Talmadge, Sage of Salem
King Claudius, our old famntnr
of the Hamlet dab, declared that
nu orrense was rank and'smelled
to heaven. His conscience, it will
be called, did not back fir In this
manner until he had decided that
Hamlet was practically certain to
uncover something that was rot
ten in the state of Denmark. The
sing was not exceptional as a nol-
itician. He doubtless honed that
Hamiet would sup. in which event
he might reasonably ascribe his
declaraton to have reference to
some trifle, such as closing the
aoor or a. not stove with the eras
er end of a lead pencil. As the
late lamented Lafe Youne was
wont to say, politics is a great
game.
Burley Torp, who considered
himself brainy, always carried his
loose change in his left-hand vest
pocket. Being right-handed, he
figured he'd spend less freely If
he did so. But It never seemed
to make much difference.
The wise will submit ta th In.
evitable. Bink Elkins got him
self a serious scalp affection by
trying to compel a cowlick to be
have in conformity with the rest
of his hair.
I have known men res. and
women who acted like cowlicks.
Why act like a cowlick? There's
a bean of thines better than a
cowlick to act like.
The Count of Monte Cristo"
which held for a full week at the
Grand theatre, was followed by
Will Rogers In "Judge Priest."
which is still going strong, with a
promise of continuing for 10 days
or more. The fact that people go
in great numbers to see such pic
tures as these helps bolster op
faith in human nature a faith
which at times, because of indfr
gesion perhaps, has been a bit
wobbly. We like to see, most of
us, the honest, old-fashioned love
of a girl and a boy or a man and
a woman, and we like to see in
the contest continually being
waged between the forces of good
and evil the good triumphant.
Whether we find these things in
the richly romantic settinsr of a
Dumas novel or in the plain coun
tryside of an Irvin Cobb story the
effect la much the same. .
Ad vie (f Jnfk PrlMt f rv m
young lawyer: "Boy, you'd bet
ter get your breeches haif-aoied.
I sat through two republican ad
ministrations neiore i rot my first
cUent. .
"The firrttn of UTlmnnla
Street" has been the outstanding
feature on the week at the. xnai.
nOTS theatra. T wnndv 4f mnn
beautifully sentlmeatal- picture
. ... . .
wws oas ever sees made or
will over bo made? After an. vnn
know, there is a limit to things
oilman uus siae oi neevea, and X
am not entire!' MnHaMbi t m
heaven is ntterly perfoct. At aay
me, t am quite sure, ir heaven
la the sort of pert ectioa that some
of use have pictured it. that some
of the rest of us will not be happy
mere,
Quoting from Beverly Hills in
Liberty: "Tho Barretts of Wlm
pole Street,", a film which must
have been inspired. And that Is
a big word, .''.
Most small town newspapers In
the old days had their loafers,
some of them, Uke Link Burk,
whom I knew, always Interesting
and usually welcome. It may still
be so. I don't know. ; Link loved
good poetry and had read mack.
He had a paraUel from a stand
ard poem for. pretty much every
selection f or.,the Pp?t of Portland eorimiisslosr-ixr- theeyea
of the Portland Journal the voters of Oregon will find he
is "an excellent fi!ectioa for Eovernor of the state.
Times Held No
i
D. H. TALMADOB
thing. The printing office towel,
for example, moved him to recall
a line from Mr. Poe's Raven
"Darkness there and nothing
more." And the leaky cylinder
and pipes of a steam engine sug
gested to him Marco Bozaris,
"bleeding at every pore." The
news has Just reached me by
newspaper that Link died the oth
er day, an old, old man, at the
home of a daughter in Illinois.
Hence this thought of him.
Elisabeth Barrett naturally
read and loved the poetry of Rob
ert Browning, but like others of
yesterday and today sbe was occa
sionally enable to fathom the
mean in e of fcla lino An an.
dote bearing upon the matter is
nsea m "The Barretts of Wlmpole
Street" During one of Brown
ing's calls at the Barrett home
Elizabeth asks him to read a cer
tain verse In one of his poems,
the sense of which is not qnite
clear to her. Browning takes the
book and strides back and forth,
reading and rereading the verse
half aloud. Suddenly he stops, his
face wreathed in - smiles. "My
dear," he says, "when these lines
were written only God and Rob
ert Browning knew their meaning,
and now only God knows."
When a man goes down town
to bar beefsteak and retnmi with
only a package of breakfast food
what is one to think A Salem
Citizen Who. did thta Atti-thnt!
to a new pair or bifocal glasses
he was wearing, but ft seems to
no i pretty shaky explanation.
Heaven knows the best Of n-rrvl a na
tion is shaky enough, but this is
vemDie.
A feller says to me the other
day that life is Uke a cage. (Wo
met up with such fellers now
and. then.) We're like the jan
gle beasts in the menagerie, he
says, imprisoned without any re
gard to our wishes, and wo doat
know where we came from aad
we don't know where we're going.
Once in a while, he says w al
most remember something wo
knew a long time ago, but only
almost, and sometimes we have a
feeling about where we're headed
for that's almost a certainty, hat
cot sure enough to bet on. And.
says he, I ain't going to akin my
self all up beatlag against the
bars of the cage we're in. No,
sir, not me, says he,- I don't aim
to make my life a misery by hur
rying and fretting.. -
X reckon there Is something to
what the feller says in the tore
going. But such fellers are liable
to overdo it. There ain't mnch
fun or profit in fishing when a
man waits for the worm to crawl
onto the hook without assistance.
About as ridiculous a thing as
I know of is lofty criticism of a
person who does not consider
laughable something which the
critic does consider laughable.
It is no discredit to a person
to say of him that he is behind
the times. I is barely possible
the times are going too fast for
their own good.
All sorts of political prophets
are abroad. Personally, I accept
most seriously the one who draws
his prophesies from a feeling In
his bones. I know some pretty
good prophets who came from
that school.
.Winter is approaching. There
are all sorts of signs. Crim
Tump tells me of a sign that has
proved reliable in his family; Wil
ly Tamp awakens in the morning
with the bedclothes wrapped about
his head and his bare legs stick
ing out from the knees down.
The tumult and the shouting dies.
The captain and tbe kings de
part Still stands Thine ancient sacri
fice. An humble and a contrite heart.
There is no special reason for
bringing up these lines of Kipling
at this time. It is only that an
occasional reminder will do us no
harm.
Stan Still informs me with a
(Turn to page 7)
Bits for Breakfast
By R. J. HENDRICKS
Oregon schools la
early pioneer days:
a V -a
(Continuing from yesterday:)
Our first public schools (public
in that they took all kinds of pu
pils) really originated la the cov
ered wagon trains on the plains
bound for Oregon. From 184) on,
nearly every westward bound
company of covered wagon im
migrants had its school, held by
thex evening camp fire, and some
of the instructors were scholarly
men and women. These teachers
often became our early commun
ity teachers. This was true of
Chloe D. Boone, great-g r e at
granddaughter of Daniel Boone
of Kentucky. She was in the
184C immigration, and her school
was in Polk county, not far from
the early Applegate settlement
near the RlckrealL back of the
present Kllendale.
She became the wife of Geo. L.
Carry, .secretary of state and
three times governor, the last
chief executive of the territory of
Oregon. Abigail Scott Daniway
taught an early school at Cincin
nati (Kola.),
.:: w "a
Outside of the toissioa Indian
manual labor school which be
came the Oregon Institute and by
change of name Willamette un
iversity, the first bufldlng erect
ed in Salem exclusively for school
purposes stood on tbe corner of
Commercial street south of Mar
ion sqaare. Bat it was a subscrlp
tioa school, the frame building
for It having been pat. up around
I860. Some of its early teachers
were Sarelia L. Prlngle, Mrs.
Maulsby aad Thomas Caton. In
that building was organized the
First Congregational church of
Salem; political meetings were
held ia it, aad it was used as a
polling-place ia general elections.
and for other purposes. Finally
aronad lSSS-sa, it was moved
south a few blocks, to about the
center of the one between Court
and State streets, aad a hook
store-waa kept la ft. The latter
site was afterward occupied by
the Capital National bank. (bow
;'"::'. cbapteb xxn
"When's Wallace coming back to
town!" . '
"In hemt ton davs. X had a let
tVK AivU UUU UM. UlVi Ulii.f
Tea days; and she would have to
lace Wallace, Bave to tell him that
she had made a mistake about her
feelings toward him and give him
back his ring: and his watch brace
let . . . and the knowledge that she
was hurting and humiliating him
would hurt aertoo. The thought of
. m v: .VI- A11
it worried her more, now than the
anticipation of the storm that would
break ever her head when she told
the family that she had broken her
enmement.
"TotrH "tell him everything just
as soon as yoa see fciau won't yon,
Susan? She could feel the intent
Bess af. Allen's eyes on her as she
spoke, and her own eye veered
away and fixed therasewe os the
nearest window where the darkness
was thjctathtjr behind the pane
Of coarse I will only irs coin
to be a terribly hard thlnr to do."
"Bn youll do itr His hands
reached oat across the white doth
and gripped loth of hers hard.
"Just as seen as ye earn?" '
Til have to, Allen. I'm going
to. But if a wet going to be easy."
"What's the matter With yon,
Susan? Gettinr eoU feett Still a
little bit crazy about that gay? Be
honest with me."
T'm trying to be honest, Allen.
Tow know I dont care anything at
all about Wallace. Yoa must know
It hot it's not coin to be easy to
give him back his ring. I dont Kho
to hurt anyone. And then there's
my family I wish they didn't have
to knew about it. They're going to
Uke all this err badly. They're
all so pleased about my engage
ment. They feel as if I'm marrying
the kind of man that I probably
would hare married if they hadn't
lost all their money. Not that Wal
lace has much money, for he hasn't
But his people have a lot, and my
people think that that is frightfully
important particularly just now
when they're so poor themselves.
"It's going to be just plain awful
to live with them after they know
about you and me," she finished.
"That's absurd, Susan." Allen's
voice was sharp, and it sounded as
if he were out of patience with her.
"Absurd?" she repeated. He
didn't know how Uncle Worthy
could poison a whole day by his sar
casm, as he often had, and how
Lutie could talk on and on about
the possibilities of Susan's becom
ing an old maid, as she often had
talked durhfjg the months before
Wallace's proposal. Tt wouldn't be
so bad if I had a job and could be
out of the house all flay, or if I could
marry you right away and walk
out
His hands pressed hers. "That's
an idea. Why don't you do it?" His
face lighted up. "Will you, Susan?"
T'm like Garibaldi, I'm afraid,"
he went on after a pause, "when he
told his soldiers he could offer them
nothing but cold and hunger and
misery if they went on with him I
can't offer you much else, Susan, for
a while. I haven't enough money
for anything but a room la a board
ing house somewhere and three
meals a day. Pretty slim ones, too.
I imagine, while I'm spending so
much on this law coarse of mine.
How about it?"
Susan hesitated. She had a mor
tal longing; to say, "Yes," to marry
Allen at once and go to live with
him itt'a cheap room somewhere.
The vision of such a place flashed
through her mind badly furnished,
small, with trunks shoved under the
bed and a gas ring on a table for
the making of coffee, bars of sugar
and buns on a closet shelf, and over
everything the patina of poverty.
But it would be lovely
T could pass up tbe law course,
as far as that goes," Allen said
suddenly, and as he spoke Susan
made her decision. "Then we'd be
sure to have enough money."
"No." Susan was emphatic T
wouldn't think of letting you do
that when you're as close to your
bar exams as yoa are Why, you'd
be just a courthouse clerk for the
rest of your life if you stopped
going to law school nowl 111 stay
on at home until we can get married
the First National.) Ia 1855 the
Salem school district was organ
ized, in 1857 construction of the
"big Central" school house com
menced, and it was finished la
1868. The Tittle Central," next
to it was erected some years aft
er for a school for negro chil
dren, for some pioneers brought
their slaves, and for several
years, in the '60's-'?0'a, Salem
had more colored people than
now. The "Central" school build
ings stood on land now occupied
by the Salem high school build
ing. Along about 1858, public
school money began to become
available; at first the expenses
were eked out with tuition char
g. Among the teachers ia the "big
Central'' building for the 10 years
beginning with 1S58 were: Syl
vester Penaoyer and wife, Dana
C Pearson, Clara Watt, A. a
Daniels, P. L. Price, S. H. Jea
ner, Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Carr, Miss
es Emily Belt, Nellie Stipp, X.
Humphrey, XL Boise, and Mr. 1.
T. Oathouse.
Sylvester Pennoyer became
governor of Oregon, 1IS7-1SII.
Other early teachers became
prominent la various ways. Mrs.
Rufus Mallory. whose husband
served in congress, taught the
colored school in the "little Cen
tral" building as long as tt was
maintained as such; lata sixties
and early seventies. Many private
schools were taught fa Salem up
to tbe late sixties.
Ir. V V '
Aside from the peculiar prob
lem of colored children, the his
tory of school straggles ta what
became Salem were aboat the
same as those in other parts of
early Oregon. The first school
buildings were generally of logs:
ia eastern Oregon of tamarack
logs; with the benches of split
logs, the flat sides up, and sup
ported on stout pep driven into
auger holes. That was the case
with the Rawhide sehoot -Bear
Wild. Horse creek, sot far from
tha present Athena, v
the right war. My people wiS s!m
ply have to realise that! have a life
of my own that they mustn't try to
interfere with. After all, I'm not a
child who must obey everything
they-tell me to de --.f
What did those words remind her
of, she wondered. Then all at once
she knew. John had told her some-
thins; of the sort at Cnllenr on
Christmas day when Aunt Edna
had sent for her to come home to
take Wallace's telephone call.
"YouH have to -crow un seme
rime or other, Susie." John had said.
"and leara how to menace taines
in your own way instead of letting
the family do all your thinking for
yoov -
He had bee absoietelv rizht.
toe, for the time had come already
when she would have to stand as
ander the family disapproval of
herjiliingofWsJlaee.Shewasgoiar
to have to think for .herself instead j
of letting them think for her as they
always had done,
"TheyH say that H's aethine less
than criminal to break my engage
ment after its oeev announced in
the newspapers," she said, thinking
thian eat. - "They'll tell me that
1 na punueiy egrcin vaiiace, i
aad I suppose that's what I shall I
be deinr, as a matter of fact bat
that's Aunt Edna's fault because
she announced the mga-gemnt
without saying a word to me about
She knew that she , would never
be able to dare point that out to
Aunt carta without starting a ram-1
ur battle. For. usually she and
Lutie and Uncle Worthy thought
and acted together like one person,
and whatever one of them -did was
perfect in the eyes of the other two
whenever an argument arose that
involved Susaa or John. The three
older people stood shoulder to
shoulder then, as solid as a stone
wall;
"Why dont von find somethins to
do and get out of the house part of
the time?" Allen asked. T should
think you'd enjoy it, Susan. I've
often wondered why you didnt"
"Well, I have, too said Susan.
Tve wanted to for years, bat
they've always been - dead set
against it, They seemed to think
rd lose caste if I turned into a
working girl . They're very old
fashioned about things like that.
They've never been out in the world
much and now I couldn't go out
and get a position because they
really need me at home. They cant
afford to keep Anna any longer.
ana im going to have to take over
her work from bow on."
The waiter cams to take a war the
coffee service and the untouched
toast, cold now with the butter and
cinnamon and sngar standing up in
ntue rugea on it.
T dont know who'd give me any
work to do, anyhow." Susan went
on when the. table was empty ex
cept tor an asntray and Allen's
package of cigarettes. "I've never
touched a typewriter or an adding
machines in my life. But the very
thought of them the thought of
getting into some sort of business
office always has fascinated me.
I've asked my father a dozen times
to let me go to business college,
but"
"But what?"
"Well. I've been roinr around
with Wallace for a long time, and
my father always pointed out to me
that if I married him I wouldn't
have any use for a knowledge of
office work. That was true, of
course."
"How lonsr have you known that
bird?"
"Almost two years.,
"And you're sure yoa werent In
love with him aay of that time,
Susan?" His steady raze was still
on her face and Susan could see
how anxiously he was waitinr to
hear her answer. He dldnt seem to
be sure of her as he had been the
night before when he had drawn
her into his arms aad told her, with
all the confidence in the world, that
he knew she cared for him.
"No, I never felt sure of mvself
with him. I mean that I always had
a suspicion that love was a great
deal stronger and mere thrilling
than anything I felt for him. I
didat like to let him kiss me, aad
he knew it He told me. fust the
Oregon had no superintendent
of public Instruction, as such, un
til January 30. 1878, when Syl
vester Simpson began bis term,
under appointment of Governor
Grover. He was a brother of Sam-,
uel L. Simpson, poet laureate, au
thor of The Beautiful Willamette.
The first elected incumbent of
that of flee was Dr. L. L. Row
land, taking ' charge Sept 14,
1874.
Dr. Rowland had been pres
ident of the Christian college
SAVE
Here Are Some NEARLY NEW
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night when he went away, that 1
was a very chilly sort of person."
"But yoa would have married him
if it hadnt been for last night
wonldnt you?"
Susan's shoulders went wp in a
shrug. "J suppose so," she an
swered truthfully. "I'd reached the
point where I thought I could not .
stand living; at home a day longer.
And thtm I ana HtorA trm tt4 lik-
ingme, and I knew he'd be what's
known as a good husband.' You've
heard of s-irl marrviiiff for a home.
hareat you?-,
Alien nodded.
"Ufall. that's what' t mnXmm .
te da. I think. Bat now I wosddat
sarv Thira if k mnuit tK. k :
house in jtewa and a camp in the
Adirondack and a Palm Rrh
boaseboatlf TH tell him so, too.
waea ne comes home, bat 111 have
to do it in my own way. Allen.
fly about it at my own, time when
Wallace ir realty oat of the pie-
cure. . ;..
. Tan ' talk lit aV htLt t
They cant make yon marry a man
if raa don't want t a Tim 4i..i
his chair hack with aa impatient
BBOTcoewx eno, gee up. -its good
old days whea girls were ander
their elders tiramha tan hM M
for a long time."
wi anew that lust as wen as yoa
do."- Susan tried to defend herself.
"Bat if I let Wallace go and they
find out about it they'll just be ter
ribly tUsarraaahla ahnnt if m-nA
they'll try to get him tack prob-
.) . aWMaV BW9 a VB a m a a.
wuuj. intyu mu mm i oosrt snow
my owa mind or sometbins; like
that"
-IF yoa let Wallace go! That's
good." said Allen, plainly angry
now as he walked ent of the dininv
room beside her. '
"When I let him go," Susaa cor- -
rected herself rmirlrW "Plaae rfnt
V.
doubt me like this, Allen."
xaey wanted home slowly, arm in
arm, their shoulders touching as
they moved. But something his
doubt of her hsd come between
them. Susan could almost feel it.
like a curtain that had been dropped
between them. She tried to brush
it aside, to get back to the understanding-
and the intimacy of the
f t-A a. at
n Dezore. -
im.ti . .- . .
xeu me, aoout yourseu, Allen,"
she said aa they walked along out
Of the hum and tha livhta n-t fh.
downtown district into the dark
residence streets of the North Side.
"Not about your job, but about you
when yoa were a little boy out
west and where yoa went to school,
and so on."
"I didn't llye out in New Mexico
when I was a kid," he answered. T
lived on Center Street about ten
blocks from your house. My mother
had a shoo there where she sewed
for people "
"Well. then, my annt tamMk..
. - .wuu.w
heri" Susaa exclaimed, breaking in
nnon him. WTii mn -
to live with na thov nM
membered a Mrs. Sholes who had
oeen a dressmaker ta our neighbor
hood years ago. And Uncle Worthy
remembered that she moved away."
Allen nodded his head, his eyes
straight ahead of him as if he were.
thmlfi w nf aonaethinv that ub
him far away from Susan.
. , w? wnen she was first
taken aiele." h aatVt hm.mi wen-
had I lung trouble. First we went op
w oaraoac ana a year afterward
we went out to New Mexico to live.
"Last Fall aha k.
tinned after a second's pause. "We
ne V? carea mQca r the west she
and L And aa uwm a. .k.
I couldnt stand it. So I came back
nere. t nave some friends here, ani
I d alwava thnTi, ,v;- 1
- . - . " UU wwo
this neighborhood, ia particular
a nume, lonwnow. u a grown
m? feet tall and proportion
ate Iv broad nf chnnlJ.. ... l.
W va nflv !B44fcr eSVSa U0
called wistful. Allen .was wistful
tMJ'CmS
"DO a&w of vnn fay-nfie. I:
here?" Susan asked, thinking of the
aiuu 4 welcome ne naa received at
the house ia Onta .v-
Prt f town that he had always
uiupi ox as nome.
"No. My father and mother sepa
rated When I waa ahnnt ri-w
old. He lives out in Oregon some-
wucn. x never near irom mm,"
(To Be Continued)
C-jTrtSH. llll.kr Kiaa ran-na SjadkaaL U.
(now state normal school) at
Monmouth, and superintendent of
schools for Polk county, and. la
1860, organized and conducted
the first teachers' institute held
in Oregon. For the term begin
ning in July, 18.91, he was super
intendent of the state asylum for
the insane (now called state hos
pital.) He came to Oregon with
the 1844 covered wagon immigra
tion. (Turn to page 7)
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